NEW YORK ( TheStreet) -- High-profile blowups may wreck havoc on the markets, but investors still may be better off than they think, Jim Cramer said about Tuesday's market action.

Cramer told "Mad Money" viewers today's selling really wasn't that bad and even had a few bright spots.

The market is all about symmetry, the predictable cycle of stocks going from free fall, to stability and eventually to recovery and rally.

That cycle will be playing out for DuPont ( DD), he said, as this stock he owns for his charitable trust, Action Alerts PLUS, delivered a horrendous quarter Tuesday. DuPont reported a 32-cent-a-share profit when the markets were looking for 47 cents. That's a full 32% less than investors were expecting and weakness that should have been pre announced by the company weeks ago.

But despite the weakness and the resulting carnage in its share price, Cramer said that DuPont now yields 3.8% and will likely bottom around 4% as the prospects for this great industrial can only improve with the global economy.

Cramer said two other names, 3M ( MMM) and Apple ( AAPL), another Action Alerts PLUS name, also hit the markets hard, but they, too, are worth owning for the long term.

Shares of Google ( GOOG) demonstrate how this cycle works, said Cramer, as that stock was hit last week, only to stabilize and begin to recover this week.

There were other bright spots in the market, said Cramer, including Coach ( COH), Whirlpool ( WHR) and Panera Bread ( PNRA), all of which were able to surprise to the upside.

Executive Decision

In the "Executive Decision" segment, Cramer spoke with Chuck Bunch, chairman and CEO of PPG ( PPG), a chemical maker that, unlike DuPont, delivered a 5-cents-a-share earnings beat when it reported last week. PPG currently pays a 2% yield.

Bunch noted that the commodity chemical business, in which DuPont participates, is a volatile and a cyclical one, which is why PPG has chosen to jettison many of its commodity businesses in favor of specialty chemicals that offer more consistent sales and earnings. He said products like longer-lasting corrosion protection and other coatings are important to customers and help build stable relationships.

Bunch cited several areas of strength for PPG, one of which was autos. He said the auto market is still healthy and PPG is seeing growth of around 5% to 6%. Europe continues to be weak, Bunch noted, but here in America an auto renaissance has begun.

When asked about titanium dioxide, or TiO2, one of DuPont's major failings, Bunch explained that PPG is a buyer of TiO2 for many of its products. After rampant price inflation, that important component is now seeing sequential price declines, which have been great for his company.

Cramer cited PPG as another bright spot in what overall was a terrible market Tuesday.

Off the Charts

In the "Off The Charts" segment, Cramer went head to head with colleague Mark Sebastian over the direction of SPDR Gold Shares ( GLD). With the price of gold hitting six-week lows, is now the time to buy?

Sebastian looked at the correlation between the Gold ETF and a fairly new indicator called the Gold Volatility Index. Like the volatility index, or VIX, for the overall markets, the Gold VIX, looks at the volatility of gold prices. Sebastian noted the Gold VIX is now at its lowest level since the indicator came into being five years ago.

Sebastian also noted that five of the past six times the Gold VIX fell, the Gold ETF rallied big. Given the historic low level of the Gold VIX, Sebastian put a price target on the Gold ETF at $180 a share.

Cramer said he'll take five out of six odds any day of the week and he agrees with Sebastian that the ultra-low levels in the Gold VIX could be a signal of a big move to come.

Look at the Data

In his second "Executive Decision" segment, Cramer spoke with Dr. Stanley Crooke, founder, chairman and CEO of Isis Pharmaceuticals ( ISIS), a stock Cramer featured on "Speculation Friday" two weeks ago. Since that recommendation, shares of Isis were shot down 26% as a Food and Drug Administration panel raised concerns over its latest application for its cholesterol-lowering drug, Kynamro.

While the FDA panel ultimately voted nine to six in favor of Kynamro, Crooke said the agency did raise questions about possible cancer and liver side effects. But that was simply because, unlike a rival drug also up for approval, Kynamro has been more thoroughly studied and could provide answers to those questions.

To be clear, Crooke said there have been absolutely no relevant findings for either cancer or liver damage with Kynamro.

Crooke said it's important to look at the data because FDA panels can sometimes be influenced by outside factors. He said Isis stands by the quality of its work and Kynamro works as promised.

No Huddle Offense

In his "No Huddle Offense" segment, Cramer said he continues to be mystified by the market's reaction to falling oil prices.

He said the theory that the markets should head lower on lower gas prices because the global economy is slowing is simply stupid. In fact, high gas prices are a tax on both small business and on the consumer. When gas prices fall, both have more money to spend.

Cramer said if oil falls to $80 a barrel then he would have to raise estimates for a whole host of consumer-related companies.

At the time of publication, Cramer's Action Alerts PLUS had positions in AAPL and DD.

Jim Cramer, host of the CNBC television program "Mad Money," is a Markets Commentator for TheStreet.com, Inc., and CNBC, and a director and co-founder of TheStreet.com. All opinions expressed by Mr. Cramer on "Mad Money" are his own and do not reflect the opinions of TheStreet.com or its affiliates, or CNBC, NBC Universal or their parent company or affiliates. Mr. Cramer's opinions are based upon information he considers to be reliable, but neither TheStreet.com, nor CNBC, nor either of their affiliates and/or subsidiaries warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. Mr. Cramer's statements are based on his opinions at the time statements are made, and are subject to change without notice. No part of Mr. Cramer's compensation from CNBC or TheStreet.com is related to the specific opinions expressed by him on "Mad Money."

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President Trump's move Thursday to cancel his meeting with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un sent the stock market into a "tizzy," according to TheStreet's founder and Action Alerts PLUS Portfolio Manager Jim Cramer.